JOËL URRUTY (born 1968)
Between September 19, 2015 and February 28, 2016, HMA welcomes back Hickory artist Joël Urruty in an exhibition that includes gilded sculptures and wall hangings of woven wood strips. Urruty won Best of Show in the Museum’s 2013 Road Trip: A Juried Exhibition, in conjunction with HMA's First AutoLawn Party in 2013.
Wink Gaines
"I have always found peace and solace in the outdoors and in nature. Wildlife photography combines many skill sets including ruggedness, patience, knowledge of the subject, knowledge of your camera, composition and noting the way light does its magic within your preconceived image." A selection of Hickory native Gaines' photographs will be on display at HMA between September 26, 2015 and January 10, 2016.
Steve McCurry (born 1950)
“There’s a quality to the picture, an ambiguity in her expression, that is intensely striking. Not quite a smile, not quite a frown, a mixture of curiosity and wariness in her eyes that people respond to.” (Steve McCurry, on first seeing what he had created.)
Boyce Kendrick (1927-1992)
” He was an intuitive painter, using a mix of media including oils and watercolor, with a strong sense of color, draftsmanship, and composition. ... Boyce’s [eyes] really twinkled! He had a wonderful personality.”
Wiili Armstrong (1956-2003)
"He was on medication, but art was a significant part of his therapy also." He loved the bipolar highs which was when he did much of his painting. In his own words, he was a “junk assembler, a garbage collector … a waking sleeper. A regular-kind-of-guy who just happens to know for certain he is an artist.”
Art. I have loved it for over five decades.
"It all goes back to the knowledge and enthusiasm from my elementary art teacher. It was then I fell in love with art."
PAUL HUNTER SPEAGLE (born 1982)
“I’m a blessed, gut paintin’, greasy liver mush eatin’, fast car drivin’ Ninja Turtle Goonie inspired, gator huntin’ cardinal watchin’ public vandalizin’, North Carolina family rooted, Grandfather Mountain lovin’, colorist, educated hillbilly artist."
SAM EZELL (born 1953)
“Sam uses bold shapes and bright colors to make joyful paintings of happy times. People are dressed up and having fun. Skies are blue, the sun is shining, birds have houses, and chickens come in lots of colors. His paintings are turning up around every local corner nowadays.” (from Mike’s Art Truck web site in 2014.)
Elizabeth Catlett (1915-2012)
"Printmaking for [Elizabeth] Catlett is a consciously political practice. At the same time, however, her prints – some intricately detailed and others elegantly spare – manifest her understanding that the power of an image resides in the artist’s command of form, sensitivity to materials and technical proficiency."
Carl Edwin Moser (1920-2012)
Catawba County native Carl Moser's avocation was photography, mostly of rural and mountain landscapes, wildflowers, and portraits. A member of Catawba Valley Camera Club since 1955, he often led photographers on field trips.
Eddie Hamrick (born 1954)
Hickory resident Eddie Hamrick has crafted gifts for seven presidents, four North Carolina governors, andAndrew Lloyd Webber. He gave President Obama a banjo, Charlie Daniels a fiddle and Bob Costas a stein. But he’s also gone broke seven times and he’s cheated death a couple of times.
During HMA's retrospective exhibit of Hamrick's works in 2015, Hamrick's face i was on a billboard alongside Interstate 40 in Hickory, beckoning drivers to come to the Hickory Museum of Art. It showed Hamrick dressed as Geppetto, with a sculpture of Pinocchio and Jiminy Cricket.
Woven Together: From Lesotho to Carolina
HMA's exhibits are always a mix of art that the Museum owns and art that we borrow. “Woven Together: From Lesotho to Carolina” is a borrowed exhibition that will be at HMA from May 23 to September 6, 2015.
The exhibit features tapestries woven by the Maseru Tapestries Cooperative in Lesotho, Africa, in addition to works by two Carolinas artists and one photographer.
Jacob Armstead Lawrence (1917-2000)
When Jacob Lawrence died in Seattle in 2000, the New York Times described him as "One of America's leading modern figurative painters" and "among the most impassioned visual chroniclers of the African-American experience." His North Carolina connection was his first teaching job, at Black Mountain College in 1946, after having served in the U.S.Navy recording in paint the life on board the first integrated ship in the naval services during World War II.
José Augustín Fumero (1924-2016)
Immigrant to North Carolina José Augustín Fumero once said that “My work is called woven fiber mosaics. I find that working with a woven grid, an image can be seen through many facets. … I think and create on many levels, combining the [vertical] warp (used as a platform for the beginning expression of an idea) and the [horizontal] weft (used to expand the ramifications of the original expression) to create a complete piece.” To create Saint Harley of Davidson, Fumero imagined ...
John McIver (born 1930)
At a 2005 exhibit at Charlotte's Modern Eye Gallery, he was described as "renowned for his previous work in watercolor, for which he has been awarded many honors. In this current body of work, he turns his expression to collage, and crafts energy-filled canvases of color, light, and texture. His work is reminiscent of delicate Japanese-inspired textiles."

